What I learned about the healing power of memory from a song and dance routine at my local theater. . .
A while ago I attended a performance at my local theater, by Tibetan monks from the Drepung Loseling Monastery. Established in the early fifteenth century, Loseling was once the largest monastery in Tibet, home to more than 10,000 monks. After the Chinese invasion of Tibet in 1959, the monastery was closed and most of its residents were killed or imprisoned. Some 250 monks escaped to India, where they established a replica of Loseling.
Hundreds of refugees—many of them children, whose parents send them across the treacherous Himalayas to safety in India—arrive at the monastery from Tibet each year in the hopes of receiving a traditional education. With the help of actor Richard Gere, the monks of Loseling have now created a two hour performance of the sacred music and dances of Tibet. They tour across North America and Europe, introducing Western audiences to the mystical arts of their ancient, profoundly spiritual, vanishing culture.
The performance I was at was emceed by a young Tibetan monk, who introduced each of the traditional songs and dances by telling us a little about what each ritual was intended to do.
The Dance of the Skeleton Lords was a reminder that all things are ephemeral, and that awareness of the fleeting nature of existence brings true freedom.
The beautiful, haunting Song for World Healing resonated through the hall, vibrated deep in my chest, and brought me to tears.
The emcee talked about the power of intention–how, with sacred intent, even a concert hall can become a sacred space. During the course of the evening, the theater was transformed into a Tibetan temple: a backdrop painting of the original Loseling monastery loomed above a table richly draped in red and blue and gold brocades. On the table were ritual items including a silver vase containing holy water, a copper mirror to reflect all beings, and a photo of the Dalai Lama.
Nine monks blew on giant ram’s horns, pounded on great drums painted with sacred symbols, rang gongs and bells, and chanted healing mantras for the world.
My heartbeat slowed, and I was transported into a world alive with the mystery of spirit, resonant with beauty, delight, and divine playfulness. Five monks dressed in elaborate costumes danced the Dance of the Celestial Travellers—representing the five archangels who visit the world during times of great danger and bring with them the blessings of freedom, unity and peace.
Each chant and song and sacred dance performed that night was taught orally, learned through memory.
Many of the monks on that stage were young; they had been born in refugee camps in India. They had never seen Tibet. Yet the collective memory of their culture was imprinted in their minds and hearts, and deep in the cells of their bodies.
Through memory, and through the sacred arts of Tibet, these monks carry their homeland with them, even as their country itself is being systematically stripped of its language, its culture, its spiritual heritage and its population. Their chants and dances are reminders that memory can serve a higher purpose than simply that of reassembling the past: memory can change our consciousness in the present.
Through dance and song, music and art, we can connect with the creative energies of compassion, blessing, and harmony; we can transform fear, pain and violence into a vivid and powerful experience of unity and peace–a reminder to invite grace into our lives.
The power of memory lies in what we choose to remember—and despite the great suffering that these monks have experienced, despite the destruction of their world as they have known it, the memories they choose to keep alive are positive and uplifting, offering a transformative vision of wholeness which is their gift to our fractured world.
I was deeply moved by the devotion of these men without a country, their generosity, focus, and the purity of their intention. As they chanted or played their musical instruments, their eyes were closed, their faces wore an expression of rapt concentration.
At the end of the evening, the members of the audience rose spontaneously to their feet and clapped and cheered. The monks smiled shy, uncertain smiles, ducked their heads in greeting and looked bashfully at their feet before shuffling off into the wings.
I left that concert hall knowing that some fundamental change, brewing for a long time, had begun to take place in my own heart. All week, I’ve found myself sifting through my own memories. Letting go of those which no longer serve any generous purpose; releasing old dreams and fears; old hurts, regrets and recriminations; saying goodbye to outworn ways of viewing the world, and to tattered old stories about my place within it.
In the sudden weightlessness that remains, I am rediscovering those memories that nourish a new, open, more expansive vision: a vision of a loving, creative, joyful community. Right here, in the midst of my everyday life.
What memories do you carry with you? And how do they serve your life now?





Hiro,
I’ll have to think about which memories I’m carrying, but more importantly which ones am I holding that aren’t so helpful any more. I think they are emerging when I allow myself to paint from my intuition. Symbols and patterns emerge that feel like they are coming from an encoding from somewhere else.
How fortunate to see the Tibetans. I always find them to be heart opening and transformational. Reminding me of what is important.
Christine Martell´s last blog post..Two years of blogging
What a beautiful evening!
Memories are interesting things, aren’t they? They aren’t really real, of course – they can’t be real, because the events are gone, done, over; memory exists now in this moment, and so it’s only very tenuously, if at all, connected with what actually happened.
And the emotional stickiness of memories can keep us trapped in places that are equally unreal, out of connection with what’s going on right now, here in front of us.
Letting go of that emotional content can feel strange, scary, but in the end it’s amazingly liberating.
Thanks, Hiro. I love the gentleness with which you write.
Grace´s last blog post..What’s important?
Christine, your art is such a deep expression of your own beautiful soul–it inspires and moves me in a really visceral way. It would be interesting to explore what happens when you release memories that impede your creativity, and lean into those that support and enhance it.
If you feel like it, please post a photo of your work that emerges out of this engagement with memory. I’d love to see it.
Love, Hiro
Hiro Boga´s last blog post..What I learned about the healing power of memory from a song and dance routine at my local theater. . .
Grace, yes: memories are recollections of events and experiences that no longer exist. Yet they can hold enormous power, if only because we have so many stories and emotions attached to them.
Once we let go of the stories and the emtional charge they carry, then memory doesn’t disappear, but becomes purely energy. There’s liberation in that release of the weight with which we freight memory.
But memory itself is an energy, and it can be trained and used to serve the Sacred–as the Tibetan monks do, for example.
I’d love to hear about some ways, in your own life, that memory serves your deeper purposes. Does it? Or is it just a mental construct?
Love to you and your beautiful heart,
Hiro
Hiro Boga´s last blog post..What I learned about the healing power of memory from a song and dance routine at my local theater. . .
This is a beautiful post. I love what you said about sacred intent in the beginning. It’s so clear how that sacred intent created a space for your experience. It’s very instructive and inspiring as an artist to be reminded of the power of intention in creating a work. Thank you.
Your comment about the sounds vibrating deep within your chest moved me to tears.
What a wonderful evening this must have been.
I so enjoy your writing – for an all too brief moment I was there, sitting by your side.
Thank Hiro
D
Hiro,
I , too, love your writing, I saw what you saw with the richness of your description, and my heart moved into the space of yours, as I was reading this post. Thank you so much for your great hearted wisdom. I am also making choices in the moment about how I want to carry past experiences so thank you for bringing us with you to this magnificent experience.
Molly
I loved reading this post, regarding memories. I am still going through the process of grieving my brother, who passed away march 12, 2009 after a long suffering, emotionally and spiritually. I have been going through many different memories of him. I am slowly letting go of the ones that are painful, ever so slowly, and preciously holding onto ones where I was striving to connect with his beauty..even when he could not see it or reciprocate. He had a very difficult time with that. And this was not my issue (as you said about the stone, he was a ’stone’ after all and I must accept it, it was not my fault). This morning when my husband and son left the house, and my daughter fell asleep after nursing, I had the few sacred moments to freely read this article. It was during reading it that I realized I have the freedom and grace to hold whatever memories of Ross I choose. Thank you so much Hiro for writing this and for the greater spirit and guides who helped me find the time and space to read/reflect on this and to give me this new perspective. lisa
Painting about memory.
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